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Transcript
Medieval Period… Middle Ages… Dark Ages… Who cares?
People use the phrase “Middle Ages” to describe Europe between the fall of Rome in
476 CE and the beginning of the Renaissance in the 14th century. Many scholars call
the era the “medieval period” instead; “Middle Ages,” they say, incorrectly implies that
the period is an insignificant blip sandwiched between two much more important time
periods.
The Middle Ages: Birth of an Idea
The phrase “Middle Ages” tells us more about the Renaissance that followed it than it
does about the era itself. Starting around the 14th century, European thinkers, writers
and artists began to look back and celebrate the art and culture of ancient Greece and
Rome. Accordingly, they dismissed the period after the fall of Rome as a “Middle” or
even “Dark” age in which no scientific accomplishments had been made, no great art
produced, no great leaders born. The people of the Middle Ages had squandered the
advancements of their predecessors, this argument went, and stuck themselves instead
in “barbarism and religion.” Some of today’s scholars note, however, that the era was as
complex and vibrant as any other.
The Middle Ages: The Catholic Church
After the fall of Rome, no single state or government united the people who lived on the
European continent. Instead, the Catholic Church became the most powerful institution
of the medieval period. Kings, queens and other leaders derived much of their power
from their deals with the Church. Ordinary people across Europe had to give 10 percent
of their earnings each year to the Church in taxes; at the same time, the Church was
mostly exempt from taxation. These policies helped the Church to gain a great deal of
money and power.
The Middle Ages: The Rise of Islam
Meanwhile, the Islamic world was growing larger and more powerful. After the prophet
Muhammad’s death in 632 CE, Muslim armies conquered large parts of the Middle
East, uniting them under a single ruler. At its height, the medieval Islamic world was
more than three times bigger than all of Christendom.
Under the rulers, great cities such as Cairo, Baghdad and Damascus fostered a vibrant
intellectual and cultural life. Poets, scientists and philosophers wrote thousands of
books (on paper, a Chinese invention that had made its way into the Islamic world by
the 8th century). Scholars translated Greek, Iranian and Indian texts into Arabic.
Inventors devised technologies like the pinhole camera, soap, windmills, surgical
instruments, an early flying machine and the system of numerals that we use today. And
religious scholars and mystics translated, interpreted and taught the Quran and other
scriptural texts to people across the Middle East.
The Middle Ages: The Crusades
Toward the end of the 11th century, the Catholic Church began to authorize military
expeditions, or Crusades, to expel Muslim “infidels” from the Holy Land. Crusaders, who
wore red crosses on their coats to advertise their status, believed that their service
would guarantee the remission of their sins and ensure that they could spend all eternity
in Heaven. (They also received more worldly rewards, such as papal protection of their
property and forgiveness of some kinds of loan payments.)
No one “won” the Crusades; in fact, many thousands of people from both sides lost their
lives. They did make ordinary Catholics across Christendom feel like they had a
common purpose, and they inspired waves of religious enthusiasm among people who
might otherwise have felt alienated from the official Church. They also exposed
Crusaders to Islamic literature, science and technology--exposure that would have a
lasting effect on European intellectual life.
The Middle Ages: Art and Architecture
Another way to show devotion to the
Church was to build grand cathedrals and
monasteries. Cathedrals were the largest
buildings in medieval Europe, and they
could be found at the center of towns and
cities across the continent. Around 1200,
church builders began to embrace a new
architectural style, known as the Gothic.
Also, before the invention of the printing
press in the 15th century, even books
were works of art. Craftsmen in
monasteries created handmade sacred
and secular books.
The Middle Ages: Economics and Society
In medieval Europe, rural life was governed by a system scholars call “feudalism.” In a
feudal society, the king granted large pieces of land to noblemen. Landless peasants
known as serfs did most of the work: They planted and harvested crops and gave most
of the produce to the landowner. In exchange for their labor, they were allowed to live
on the land. They were also promised protection in case of enemy invasion.
Meanwhile, the Crusades had expanded trade routes to the East and given Europeans
a taste for imported goods such as wine, olive oil and luxurious textiles. As the
commercial economy developed, port cities in particular thrived. By 1300, there were
some 15 cities in Europe with a population of more than 50,000.
In these cities, a new era was born: the Renaissance. The Renaissance was a time of
great intellectual and economic change, but it was not a complete “rebirth”: It had its
roots in the world of the Middle Ages.
Excerpted from: www.history.com
The Modern Era
The modern era’s beginning is considered to be around 1500 AD. The concept
of the modern world as distinct from an ancient or medieval world rests on a sense that
the modern world is the result of a new type of change. This change is seen as progress
driven by deliberate human efforts to better their situation. Advances in all areas of
human activity—politics, industry, society, economics, commerce, transport,
communication, mechanization, automation, science, medicine, technology, and culture
— appear to have transformed an Old World into the Modern or New World.
Source: Contemporary History of the World by Edwin Augustus Grosvenor and A Summary of Modern
History by Jules Michelet, Mary Charlotte Mair Simpson
The Renaissance
Toward the end of the 14th century AD, a handful of Italian thinkers declared that
they were living in a new age. The barbarous, unenlightened “Middle Ages” were over,
they said; the new age would be a “rebirth” of learning and literature, art and culture.
This was the birth of the period now known as the Renaissance. For centuries, scholars
have agreed that the Italian Renaissance (another word for “rebirth”) happened just that
way: that between the 14th century and the 17th century, a new, modern way of thinking
about the world and man’s place in it replaced an old, backward one. Although it is more
complicated than that… many of the scientific, artistic and cultural achievements of the
Renaissance do share common themes–most notably the humanistic belief that man
was the center of his own universe.
The Italian Renaissance in Context
Fifteenth-century Italy was unlike any other place in Europe. It was divided into
independent city-states, each with a different form of government. Florence, where the
Italian Renaissance began, was an independent republic. It was also a banking and
commercial capital and, after London and Constantinople, the third-largest city in
Europe. Wealthy Florentines flaunted their money and power by becoming patrons, or
supporters, of artists and intellectuals. In this way, the city became the cultural center of
Europe, and of the Renaissance.
The New Humanism: Cornerstone of the Renaissance
Thanks to the patronage of these wealthy elites, Renaissance-era writers and thinkers
were able to spend their days doing just that. Instead of devoting themselves to ordinary
jobs or to the self-restraint of the monastery, they could enjoy worldly pleasures. They
traveled around Italy, studying ancient ruins and rediscovering Greek and Roman texts.
To Renaissance scholars and philosophers, these classical sources held great
wisdom. Their appreciation of physical beauty and especially their emphasis on man’s
own achievements and expression formed the principle of the Italian Renaissance. This
philosophy is known as “humanism.”
Renaissance Science and Technology
Humanism encouraged people to be curious and to question received wisdom
(particularly that of the medieval Church). It also encouraged people to use
experimentation and observation to solve earthly problems. As a result, many
Renaissance intellectuals focused on trying to define and understand the laws of nature
and the physical world. For example, Renaissance artist Leonardo Da Vinci created
detailed scientific “studies” of objects ranging from flying machines to submarines. He
also created pioneering studies of human anatomy. Likewise, the scientist and
mathematician Galileo Galilei investigated one natural law after another. By dropping
different-sized cannonballs from the top of a building, for instance, he proved that all
objects fall at the same rate of acceleration. He also built a powerful telescope and used
it to show that the Earth and other planets revolved around the sun and not, as religious
authorities argued, the other way around. (For this, Galileo was arrested for heresy and
threatened with torture and death, but he refused to recant: “I do not believe that the
same God who has endowed us with senses, reason and intellect has intended us to
forgo their use,” he said.) However, perhaps the most important technological
development of the Renaissance happened not in Italy but in Germany, where
Johannes Gutenberg invented the mechanical movable-type printing press in the middle
of the 15th century. For the first time, it was possible to make books–and, by extension,
knowledge–widely available.
Renaissance Art and Architecture
During the Italian Renaissance, art was everywhere. Patrons such as Florence’s Medici
family sponsored projects large and small, and successful artists became celebrities in
their own right. Renaissance artists and architects applied many humanist principles
to their work. For example, the architect Filippo Brunelleschi applied the elements of
classical Roman architecture–shapes, columns and especially proportion–to his own
buildings. The magnificent eight-sided dome he built at the Santa Maria del Fiore
cathedral in Florence was an engineering triumph–it was 144 feet across, weighed
37,000 tons and had no buttresses to hold it up–as well as an aesthetic
one.
Brunelleschi also devised a way to draw and paint using linear perspective. That
is, he figured out how to paint from the perspective of the person looking at the painting,
so that space would appear to recede into the frame. After the architect Leon Battista
Alberti explained the principles behind linear perspective in his treatise Della Pittura (On
Painting), it became one of the most noteworthy elements of almost all Renaissance
painting. Later, many painters began to use a technique called chiaroscuro to create an
illusion of three-dimensional space on a flat canvas.
Excerpted from: www.history.com